Monday, March 31, 2014

Event Update For 2014-03-31

The seas, lakes and oceans are now pluming deadly hydrogen sulfide and suffocating methane. Hydrogen sulfide is a highly toxic water-soluble heavier-than-air gas and will accumulate in low-lying areas. Methane is slightly more buoyant than normal air and so will be all around, but will tend to contaminate our atmosphere from the top down. These gases are sickening and killing oxygen-using life all around the world, including human life, as our atmosphere is increasingly poisoned. Because both gases are highly flammable and because our entire civilization is built around fire and flammable fuels, this is leading to more fires and explosions. This is an extinction level event and will likely decimate both the biosphere and human population and it is debatable whether humankind can survive this event.

A. More fires and more explosions, especially along the coasts, but everywhere generally.
B. Many more animal die-offs, of all kinds, and especially oceanic species.
C. More multiples of people will be found dead in their homes, as if they'd dropped dead.
D. More corpses found in low-lying areas, all over the world.
E. More unusual vehicular accidents.
F. Improved unemployment numbers as people die off.

Note: The home construction industry and mortuary and headstone businesses might fare pretty well with all these homes exploding. Explosive economic growth! I swear, I can put a positive spin on just about anything...

Quote: "A large explosion and fire Monday at natural gas processing plant near the Washington-Oregon border injured four workers and led to the evacuation of about 200 people from nearby homes as flames and a mushroom-shaped cloud of black smoke reached high into the air. The 8:20 a.m. blast at the Williams Northwest Pipeline plant in the town of Plymouth, along the Columbia River, also punctured a liquefied natural gas storage tank."

Quote: "The fear of deadly toxins, though, was only heightened as fire fighters used asbestos proof suits to assess the mountain of smoking rubble, which has forced families to shut themselves inside their homes."

Quote: "But the police and RMS wanted to know if motorists were exposed to steaming piles of toxic rubble, while Fire and Rescue confirmed air safety checks were confined to the site. Mr Wren added: 'We do have a Hazmat Unit here spasmodically monitoring the smoke to make sure it's safe again for the workers and for Fire and Rescue staff.'"

Note: I think he meant 'sporadically', unless the people doing the measuring are having spasms, which actually wouldn't be too shocking. Also, will updated tourism literature mention the deadly toxins blowing around there? Just curious!

Quote: "Fire Consultant Jim Bunting from the United Kingdom described the fire as severe, with flames up to 200 feet high and covering an area of about two acres. Black billowing smoke was seen over much of the south and western areas of the island. The fire burnt profusely due to the amount of combustible material in the metal objects."

Quote: "The EPA agrees that the heat will not make the waste more or less radioactive, or cause it to explode. But since no one knows what else is mixed in with the radioactive waste, a subsurface fire could potentially react with those unknown substances, causing an explosion."

Note: So we could theoretically see explosions blowing radioactive material into the air, and radon gas spewing out, if the underground fire reaches the nuclear waste. I hope it didn't take any rocket scientists to figure out that it'd be bad news...

Quote: "Maintenance teams were evaluating a JetBlue plane at a Jamaican airport on Tuesday, a day after the Florida-bound jetliner was forced to return to the island because the flight crew smelled smoke minutes after takeoff."

Quote: "Witnesses reported an explosion after a truck caught fire on the Belle Vernon Bridge early Monday evening. Also known as the Speers Bridge, the span carries Interstate 70 over the Monongahela River between Washington and Westmoreland counties."

Quote: "A semi-truck fire and an unrelated rollover snarled traffic in both directions at 232nd Street Monday afternoon. The blaze broke out in the eastbound lanes near 232nd Street Monday afternoon, leaving little of the truck on the road beyond its charred wheels. A container truck hauling chicken feed in the other direction toppled into a ditch not far away, spilling its cargo all over the highway."

Note: One big rig burning and another overturning, same highway, different sides, same time - wouldn't be so sure those were unrelated. They definitely had a few things in common: timeframe, geographic area and the atmosphere...

Note: Meriden's been having problems. A propane tank exploded at a work site in Meriden, mentioned in the 2014-03-19 update. A car burst into flame as a man worked on it, mentioned in the 2014-03-06 update. A noxious smell blew through Meriden recently, starting at 4:30 AM, mentioned in the 2014-02-21 update. Two days after that, a man in his mid-40s dropped dead in a hotel room in Meriden, mentioned in the 2014-02-23 update...

Quote: "The lane restrictions began when the vehicle fire was reported about 9:45 p.m. Monday at mile marker 100. But the situation got worse after a turnpike service truck responded to the scene, only to be hit by a tractor-trailer and caught fire shortly after 10:30 p.m."

Quote: "More than a hundred residents were forced out of their beds early Monday when a two-alarm fire broke out. The Houston Fire Department says the blaze was reported shortly after 5 a.m. at the Woodlake Oaks Apartments on Ella Lee Lane near S. Gessner Road."

Quote: "A walk along the peaceful bike path off the Hennepin Canal in Milan, Illinois looks like something out of a horror film. Thousands of dead fish have washed up on shore as of Sunday, March 30, 2014."

Note: Authorities say it's normal. People who live there say they've never seen anything like it. Who do you believe? I think I'll go with the folks who have been living in the area...

Quote: "Three deer were found dead today in the forests of Nandadevi National Park near Joshimath during a search in the wake of reports that they were dying one after another of some infectious disease in the area."

Note: Or maybe they breathed some poisonous hydrogen sulfide, or drank some contaminated water. That'd be more likely to make them die one after another than any disease...

Quote: "An Austrian national was found dead today in his room at Parmarth Niketan Ashram, a leading spiritual organisation located on the banks of the Ganga here."

Quote: "When police broke open the door, they found Frieman lying dead on his bed, the SP said, adding he was bleeding from the nose."

Note: As mentioned, hydrogen sulfide poisoning can cause bleeding from nose, mouth, ears. This place is located right on the banks of the Ganga River. Numerous people have been found dead after mysteriously bleeding from nose/mouth/ears just like this...

Note: Well, at least this man died politely, while idling, instead of dying while driving on a highway and then veering into oncoming traffic and hitting other people head-on, which is becoming pretty common...

Quote: "The accident took place on a straightaway lined by orchards, vineyards and ranches, away from any intersection. There was no obvious reason why one of the drivers crossed into oncoming traffic, the spokesman said."

Quote: "Police have received two separate reports of a naked man wandering around in public. A member of the public reported seeing the man on Evershill Lane, Morton, at 4.10pm today (Monday, March 31), and the British Transport Police reported seeing him at Clay Cross south junction at 4.20pm. In one of the reports, the man was wearing a balaclava."

Quote: "Cal Fire crews today will go into 24-hour stand-by mode at fire stations in Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties in the face of tinderbox conditions exacerbated by meager winter rainfall. The seasonal workforce increases in Southern California don't typically begin until May or June. So far this year, Cal Fire has responded to more than 800 wildfires. In an average year, its personnel would typically fight fewer than 275 blazes."

Note: So, a month or two before they would normally call up seasonal workers and already they've fought more than 800 fires compared to 275 for an average year! That's a huuuuuge increase...

Quote: "Zigui and nearby counties are not traditionally associated with earthquakes, according to the historic record. Some 18 earthquakes were recorded in 2003 when the Three Gorges project started operation, the 21st Century Business Herald reported. Neighboring Badong county had one earthquake in 1,000 years before 1985. Between 2003 and 2011, there have been more than 70 earthquakes of magnitude-2 or stronger, the Beijing-based newspaper reported."

Note: Three Gorges holds a whole lot of water, and water is heavy, so all that extra mass is adding stress to the underlying geology. The same thing is happening all around the world as vast amounts of mass flow from the thick continental plates to the thin oceanic plates as the ice around the world melts away, resulting in more quakes and volcanic eruptions, especially in the oceans and near coastlines...

1 comment:

It's all pretty bad news. I've passed through the area by the refinery in Philly and there are always small ponds of water around, while the refinery itself sits right by a river (Delaware, I believe), so it doesn't surprise me that gases (beside those that the refinery vents into the air on a 24/7 basis as part of their operation) are causing problems there. The same holds for vehicles crossing bridges now - it's a crap shoot whether you'll make it all the way across (and even after that you aren't safe).

Earthquakes are becoming more intense (as in the Chile earthquake you mentioned at the end of the last comment box) and numerous.

I really don't like the fact that diseases like ebola and various novel flu strains are expanding despite our efforts to slow or stop them. Hope I pass out instantly from H2S than go through a protracted and agonizing demise from one of the weird diseases floating around now.